Exiles, Travellers and Vagabonds

Rethinking Mobility in Francophone Women's Writing

Editor(s) Kate Averis,Isabel Hollis-Touré

Language: English

Genre(s): Literary Criticism, Modern Languages

Series: French and Francophone Studies

  • October 2016 · 320 pages ·216x138mm

  • · Hardback - 9781783169283
  • · eBook - pdf - 9781783169290
  • · eBook - epub - 9781783169306

About The Book

Travel writing, migrant writing, exile writing, expatriate writing, and even the fictional travelling protagonists that emerge in literary works from around the globe, have historically tended to depict mobility as a masculine phenomenon. The presence of such genres in women’s writing, however, poses a rich and unique body of work. This volume examines the texts of Francophone women who have experienced or reflected upon the experience of transnational movement. Due to the particularity of their relationship to home, and the consequent impact of this on their experience of displacement, the study of women's mobility opens up new questions in our understanding of the movement from place to place, and in our broader understanding of colonial and postcolonial worlds. Addressing the proximities and overlaps that exist between the experiences of women exiles, migrants, expatriates and travellers, the collected essays in this book seek to challenge the usefulness, relevance or validity of such terms for conceptualising today’s complex patterns of transnational mobility and the gendered identities produced therein.

Endorsements

‘This thoughtful volume offers diverse angles on gender, space and place, from “ectopic literature” to women who become strangers in their own homes. Its distinguished contributors explore the many forms of mobility – imagined, virtual and real, voluntary and involuntary – that have shaped today’s literary and political worlds.’
-Professor Nicholas Harrison, King’s College London

About the Editor(s)

Author(s): Kate Averis

Kate Averis is Lecturer in French Studies at the University of London Institute in Paris.

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Author(s): Isabel Hollis-Touré

Isabel Hollis-Touré is Research Fellow at Queen’s University Belfast, with research specialism is North African migration to France.

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